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Dec 9, 2012
12/12
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stateless refugees initially russians in 1922, a first step in the development of international refugee law and policy. the international office of you are fuji in 1938. he yearned to rally members of the non-- and wished he could do something akin to lindberg's recent flight across the atlantic. 1928 he decided it was up to him too a tattered equivalent to go around the world alone by bicycle. luckily he didn't have to do that actually. he departed shanghai on a battered secondhand bicycle but then upgraded to a new bicycle in ban cook and a battered secondhand motorcycle. it gave a new motorcycle and a letter that guaranteed assistance from area offices around the world. the publish account thanked the worldwide services of the ymca, shell oil, and the fire stone company. he dependented on the goal availability of gasoline, oil, and tin food. the array much industrial good and services that were now spread almost everywhere in the world. like the circumcycling with the south asian he made the transend with the encouragement of many white russians. above all, there was the pass port for wh
stateless refugees initially russians in 1922, a first step in the development of international refugee law and policy. the international office of you are fuji in 1938. he yearned to rally members of the non-- and wished he could do something akin to lindberg's recent flight across the atlantic. 1928 he decided it was up to him too a tattered equivalent to go around the world alone by bicycle. luckily he didn't have to do that actually. he departed shanghai on a battered secondhand bicycle but...
570
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Dec 31, 2012
12/12
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a first in the development of international refugee law and policy. soboleff yearned to rally members of the non-bolshevik russian diaspora and he wished russians to do something akin to lindens recent flight across the land but in a july, soboleff decided it was up to him to do a proudly pattered canadian equivalent to go around the world alone by bicycle. likely he didn't have to do that actually. he departed shanghai on a battered secondhand bicycle, but then upgraded to a new bicycle in bangkok, then to a battered secondhand motorcycle in singapore. a benefactor gave him a brand-new aerial motorcycle in karachi, guaranteed parts and systems from aerial offices around the world. soboleff and his publisher can also think the worldwide services of the ymca, shell oil and the firestone company, and he depend on global availability of gasoline, oil and food. the array of industrial goods services that were now spent almost everywhere in the world. like a certain cycle in a south asian diaspora, soboleff made his transit with the encouragement of many s
a first in the development of international refugee law and policy. soboleff yearned to rally members of the non-bolshevik russian diaspora and he wished russians to do something akin to lindens recent flight across the land but in a july, soboleff decided it was up to him to do a proudly pattered canadian equivalent to go around the world alone by bicycle. likely he didn't have to do that actually. he departed shanghai on a battered secondhand bicycle, but then upgraded to a new bicycle in...
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Dec 15, 2012
12/12
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stateless refugees, initially russian, in 1922, a first dip in the development of international refugee law and policy, the international office of refugees would when that 1938 peace prize. a year and to rally members of the non bolshevik russian diaspore and wasted they could do something akin to lembergs inspiring recent flight across the atlantic. in 1928 he decided it was up to him to do a proudly tatterdemalion, go round the world alone by bicycle. luckily did not have to do that and departed shanghai on a battered second-hand bicycle been upgraded to a new bicycle in bangkok in in a battered second-hand motorcycle in singapore. a benefactor gave him a brand new aerial motorcycle was a letter that guaranteed assistance. he think the worldwide services of the ymca, shell oil, and the firestone company and depended on the global availability of gasoline, oil, and food. the array of goods and services spread everywhere in the world. like the surf and cycling with their south asian diaspore, he made his transit with the encouragement of many scattered white russians. above all he had his
stateless refugees, initially russian, in 1922, a first dip in the development of international refugee law and policy, the international office of refugees would when that 1938 peace prize. a year and to rally members of the non bolshevik russian diaspore and wasted they could do something akin to lembergs inspiring recent flight across the atlantic. in 1928 he decided it was up to him to do a proudly tatterdemalion, go round the world alone by bicycle. luckily did not have to do that and...
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Dec 25, 2012
12/12
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a first step in the development of international refugee law policy. the international office of refugees who won the 1938 nobel peace prize. he yearns to -- diaspora and he was the russians could do something that can to the inspiring recent flight across the atlantic. in 1928 he decided it was up to him to do a tattered to mail in equivalent to go around the world alone by bicycle. luckily he didn't have to do that. he departed shanghai on a better bicycle but upgraded to a new bicycle in bangkok into a secondhand motorcycle in singapore. the benefactor gave him a brand-new aeriel motorcycle in karachi plus a letter the guaranteed parts and assistance in aerial offices around the world. in his published a county think the worldwide services of the ymca ,-com,-com ma shell oil and the firestone company and he depended on the global availability of gasoline, oil and food. the array of industry of good services that were now spread almost everywhere in the world. like the circumspect wing south asian diaspora he made his transit with think richmond of s
a first step in the development of international refugee law policy. the international office of refugees who won the 1938 nobel peace prize. he yearns to -- diaspora and he was the russians could do something that can to the inspiring recent flight across the atlantic. in 1928 he decided it was up to him to do a tattered to mail in equivalent to go around the world alone by bicycle. luckily he didn't have to do that. he departed shanghai on a better bicycle but upgraded to a new bicycle in...
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Jan 8, 2012
01/12
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very last paragraph of the book and i should point out that i have my john judy, son ralphy, son-in-law and daughter mickey are bug daughter aya and son nathan is watching us on a livecast from singapore. so hi, nathan. so here's the last paragraph of the book. a special thanks go to my wife judy and four children. with them i have climbed mount defiance and mount independence, walked the walls, walked the ruins and the town square of st. albins. visited william johnson's mansion in the woods and benedict arnold's headquarters in montreal, fort henry and snowshoe should youed where robert's men met catastrophe 200 years before. during the time that i worked on this book judy and i have seen our wonderful teenagers grow to adulthood, graduate fine institutions of learning, traveled the world, engage in public service, go to war and return from it, marry, and even begin having children of their own. their spirit of adventure, insight and good sense was -- and in good humor inspired and the company was not the least of this author's pleasures. with their kind, patient and wise mother's per
very last paragraph of the book and i should point out that i have my john judy, son ralphy, son-in-law and daughter mickey are bug daughter aya and son nathan is watching us on a livecast from singapore. so hi, nathan. so here's the last paragraph of the book. a special thanks go to my wife judy and four children. with them i have climbed mount defiance and mount independence, walked the walls, walked the ruins and the town square of st. albins. visited william johnson's mansion in the woods...
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May 13, 2012
05/12
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merely enforcing the laws and would be enforcing all the laws. it is true that i may never be heard of again, but i will have kept my oath of office. he did get to boston to have. the newspapers dug up ever for an law and their results to enforce it. a law against importing oysters into the york from may to september. there is a law against begging. what about the law against high-flying some of the 14th street. is the debt to have a deck of playing cards and a college or ship. they included the average citizen has been the life of crime. the newspapers just would not let up. the police force is accused of being so over jealous that they are arrested innocent women as true workers. a cartoon of the statue of liberty being arrested for being an unaccompanied female at night. [laughter] that is the front page. a close friend became so worried about him. roosevelt looks worn and tired and has lost much of his natural step in buoyancy. at this rate is only a question of timely is a breakdown, and when he does it will be a bad one. and then to make ba
merely enforcing the laws and would be enforcing all the laws. it is true that i may never be heard of again, but i will have kept my oath of office. he did get to boston to have. the newspapers dug up ever for an law and their results to enforce it. a law against importing oysters into the york from may to september. there is a law against begging. what about the law against high-flying some of the 14th street. is the debt to have a deck of playing cards and a college or ship. they included...
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May 29, 2012
05/12
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there is a law against beggars. a law against kite flying on fourteenth street. it is illegal to have the deck of playing cards in college or a ship. the law concluded the average citizen has been leading a life of crime. the newspapers wouldn't let up. the police force was accused of being so overzealous they were arresting innocent women as street walkers. here is a cartoon of the statue of liberty arrested for being a, quote, and accompanied female out at night. that is the front page. a close friend of roosevelt became so worried that he wrote the cabin lodge roosevelt looked worn and tired and lost much of his natural snap and buoyancy and only a question of time before he has a breakdown and when he does it will be a bad one. pause to make bad manners worse republicans of state asked for liquor law. hotels serving a meal could serve all paul on sunday. what did new york saloon owners do? they won't be able to serve on sundays, they conferred a thousand saloons. steve brody known for jumping off the bridge, said i couldn't get the tenth room so i had to use
there is a law against beggars. a law against kite flying on fourteenth street. it is illegal to have the deck of playing cards in college or a ship. the law concluded the average citizen has been leading a life of crime. the newspapers wouldn't let up. the police force was accused of being so overzealous they were arresting innocent women as street walkers. here is a cartoon of the statue of liberty arrested for being a, quote, and accompanied female out at night. that is the front page. a...
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Apr 15, 2012
04/12
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>> remember, i studied constitutional law for many years. this is my bread and butter. i don't want to do too much to the court. [laughter] >> i think that over all it is important that there's a stability to the court. i think they should have that security and even when there is great controversy, over the court as authorities, which there is today and there will continue to be, more often than not the court goes about its business in a very professional way. system itself has a way of working itself out. for example, the court struck down many new deal statutes, but within five years, roosevelt had appointed a number of justices and most of later legislation, the economic limit on trent legislation, up on trent was upheld. it goes in cycles. >> it is always interesting about the presidential decisions. the decision in 1941 to remove japanese-americans and put them in concentration camps. i don't know if charles hughes was the chief justice at that point, but i wonder in your research if you have come across any of the reasoning behind the liberal presidents, such as
>> remember, i studied constitutional law for many years. this is my bread and butter. i don't want to do too much to the court. [laughter] >> i think that over all it is important that there's a stability to the court. i think they should have that security and even when there is great controversy, over the court as authorities, which there is today and there will continue to be, more often than not the court goes about its business in a very professional way. system itself has a...
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Sep 1, 2012
09/12
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law firm. led directly to a remarkable scene somewhere near the end africa's first year on wall street. on a particularly slow day at the office he and his fellow law clerks said there rolltop desk casually discussing their hopes and plans for the future. when it came has turned franco's surprised investors by stating clearly the war was out for him. he would, instead, with the opportunity provided self, go into politics and run for the new york state legislature. after an indeterminate stay in albany, he said, no bit of various points, he would somehow arrange to give himself appointed assistant secretary of the navy in washington. from there he would run for governor of new york and then he explained in reasonable terms, anyone who is governor of new york had a good chance to be present with any luck. of course it was not lost on any of his listeners that fdr was precisely the meteoric rise of the roosevelt, the most significant reaction on the part of his fellow law clerks to his amazing pro
law firm. led directly to a remarkable scene somewhere near the end africa's first year on wall street. on a particularly slow day at the office he and his fellow law clerks said there rolltop desk casually discussing their hopes and plans for the future. when it came has turned franco's surprised investors by stating clearly the war was out for him. he would, instead, with the opportunity provided self, go into politics and run for the new york state legislature. after an indeterminate stay in...
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Sep 4, 2012
09/12
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his daughter-in-law sounded to what museum. they are for grover cleveland, but this is just an indication of the kind of great wealth that successful, the hat city well, the 1% in new york in late 19th century could enjoy. of course the other extreme is this, this is in some ways is a byron photographs from about the turn-of-the-century kids in new york city playing by the dead horse. i don't know if this is the actual street has been identified for this specifically was, but this of course is the other extreme of life in new york. by the 1870s, and you have a growing stance as to new york's, which might come into collision that early in the streets of the city during the 1870s, starting in 1873 is a bad recession. the recession of 1873 last for several years and brings some of this class antagonisms to a head. this is 1874, tom skins square park, a location in the city which currently has been a site of controversy and confrontation between new yorkers. this was during the depression, various labor unions and worker men's grou
his daughter-in-law sounded to what museum. they are for grover cleveland, but this is just an indication of the kind of great wealth that successful, the hat city well, the 1% in new york in late 19th century could enjoy. of course the other extreme is this, this is in some ways is a byron photographs from about the turn-of-the-century kids in new york city playing by the dead horse. i don't know if this is the actual street has been identified for this specifically was, but this of course is...
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Aug 12, 2012
08/12
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the fact that that faith survived with him and he signed up the day after graduating law school to go fight in the war and that demanded hope. acts of hope whether it was in chicago working on catholic and racial counsel to integrate those schools and hospitals in that city or creation of the peace corps. or any of those programs and ultimately the acts of love. it sounds kind of corny but he really believed that. you see that commitment to love in his relationship with my mom of 56 years and some have said the greatest sign of hope and love and faith for him was the fact that he chased my mom for seven years before she agreed to marry him. a seven year court should be for 56 year marriage but it was that combination of faith, hope and one of as exhibited in his role as a father and grandfather. one story -- my brother bobby got busted for pots in 1970 and he said it at the funeral. and he said at that point and uncle bobby had died a few months earlier and dad was thinking of running for governor of maryland. he was told -- it was on the front page of the new york times and he rememb
the fact that that faith survived with him and he signed up the day after graduating law school to go fight in the war and that demanded hope. acts of hope whether it was in chicago working on catholic and racial counsel to integrate those schools and hospitals in that city or creation of the peace corps. or any of those programs and ultimately the acts of love. it sounds kind of corny but he really believed that. you see that commitment to love in his relationship with my mom of 56 years and...
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Apr 22, 2012
04/12
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that is what modern divorce law did was to equalize the riots. and some women would argue that they have it baccarat under the former assistant. but in those states, no cause divorce really does try to equalize the riots. that obviously divorce is a very contentious situation and whatever one person, what happens between a wife and a has-been and any particular case is anybody's guess. >> host: before amount of time, which he put more meat on the buzz of the democrats an example for overreactive as you said earlier? >> guest: yes, democrats had their own counterrevolution as my book "delirium" has in the subtitle. lost by a landslide, party leaders blamed women and feminists and gay and college students for the last and said that they had gone too far left. it into progressive. and what happens after that every time democrats lost an election, they would revert to that theory. the problem is we've alienated mainstream america by being too liberal and progressive on social issues. if that were true, there would be fine. but all the facts point to
that is what modern divorce law did was to equalize the riots. and some women would argue that they have it baccarat under the former assistant. but in those states, no cause divorce really does try to equalize the riots. that obviously divorce is a very contentious situation and whatever one person, what happens between a wife and a has-been and any particular case is anybody's guess. >> host: before amount of time, which he put more meat on the buzz of the democrats an example for...
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Jun 24, 2012
06/12
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1965 when the law is reform began. new yorkers, both immigrants and very much anti-immigrant in this time are really affecting public policy for the nation. jumping ahead to the 30's, these are american nazis, and east 86 street. the german american. really, a minority was in the german-american community. or for one was so traumatic that a lot of german-american willingness to sort of get out there and the nationalist, there was a small group of german american nazis, most of them are immigrants or recent immigrants from germany, and they marched on 86 street and held rallies in madison square garden and so on. this time in new york is really, a simmering time where, because of the depression and people's feeling, economically stressed competing for jobs, and because the international situation, the rise of nazism with stalin in the control of the soviet union, miscellany in control, italy, and invading ethiopia, with the japanese invading china, i mean, or ever you look in asia and europe, civil war in 1936, it stirs
1965 when the law is reform began. new yorkers, both immigrants and very much anti-immigrant in this time are really affecting public policy for the nation. jumping ahead to the 30's, these are american nazis, and east 86 street. the german american. really, a minority was in the german-american community. or for one was so traumatic that a lot of german-american willingness to sort of get out there and the nationalist, there was a small group of german american nazis, most of them are...
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Sep 4, 2012
09/12
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and in 1863 come the lincoln administration and congress passed a draft law. .. class legislation and seen as you know part of the rich man's war in a poor man's fight part of the mote tow that became common in new york and other cities. of july 1864, when the draft law is implemented all of these background resentments explode. the largely irish working class in new york seeing this is as republican plot against them, seeing it as discrimination in a class sense. they blame the war, by this point, on slaves, the fact that slavery exists so the scapegoat becomes free african-americans in new york. they are fearful that with the emancipation proclamation which lincoln has already implemented going to be a flood of free prime african-americans come up to new york and take their jobs away from this. it's fanned by some of the newspaper newspapers including the "new york hair reeled." you have the tremendous riot that starts and goes on for four cays. it is to date the worst rite in american history. as many of 500 might have died. over 100 buildings are burnt down.
and in 1863 come the lincoln administration and congress passed a draft law. .. class legislation and seen as you know part of the rich man's war in a poor man's fight part of the mote tow that became common in new york and other cities. of july 1864, when the draft law is implemented all of these background resentments explode. the largely irish working class in new york seeing this is as republican plot against them, seeing it as discrimination in a class sense. they blame the war, by this...
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Jan 30, 2012
01/12
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laws. extremely important in making sure that women have access to the workplace and women have access on equal footing to public accommodations. places like restaurants and bars and what have you. now these laws have been used by in order to overturn ladies night at local bars and restaurants. of california's one of the states where ladies night is a violation of civil rights laws. it's also chewing many other american states and if that one person overturns a mother's day promotion on the basis that it was sex discrimination they didn't win that suit but the point is that this was a plausible lawsuit to a lot of people because taking an extreme view of the prohibition against sex discrimination rather than look at it according to its purposes and according to a sensible public policy purpose which is to make sure women have equal access to the market and equal access to public institutions. we have taken a kind of abstract view that would also sweep ladies night under the same prohibition
laws. extremely important in making sure that women have access to the workplace and women have access on equal footing to public accommodations. places like restaurants and bars and what have you. now these laws have been used by in order to overturn ladies night at local bars and restaurants. of california's one of the states where ladies night is a violation of civil rights laws. it's also chewing many other american states and if that one person overturns a mother's day promotion on the...
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Sep 4, 2012
09/12
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then later they're claiming he's not enforcing the law. what law did does he pick? the law against bands performing without a license. and all the newspapers say what kind of oath is he picks this law? he knew exactly what he was doing. >> and even as police chief, what would you say the top salary was a year? >> $6 ,000. >> and he ended up with something like $600 ,000 and a million dollars. >> $3 77,000 on the day he retired. it put him richer than roosevelt. >> the most famous was? >> kevin knows more about this than i do. but his fighting against tamney hall and so tamney hall had ruled a monopoly for the new york gienlts for the national league in baseball and they are booking a frank bring in a club from baltimore in 1903 that doesn't have a name and over time the gates a name and become the new york yankees. big bill was the cofounder of the new york yankees. >> it was the way tamney would operate. the tam nigh guy owned the new york giants. he owned the new york giants and head of the transit . >> anyone wanted to train them put a stadium they couldn't get t
then later they're claiming he's not enforcing the law. what law did does he pick? the law against bands performing without a license. and all the newspapers say what kind of oath is he picks this law? he knew exactly what he was doing. >> and even as police chief, what would you say the top salary was a year? >> $6 ,000. >> and he ended up with something like $600 ,000 and a million dollars. >> $3 77,000 on the day he retired. it put him richer than roosevelt. >>...
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Feb 4, 2012
02/12
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some people in law enforcement know it. people who follow the unintelligible academic literature on this know it be personal most people aren't and don't. this is a very nonacademic manifesto saying we know this at this time to start acting like it. the first big moment of this came in boston in 1996. i want to read from the book about that. so let me set the stage for you. one of the moments in this work has turned out to be sitting down with extremely hard-core offenders and talking to them and i talk about why that makes sense and how you find them and that sort of thing in a moment but we sit down and talk to them. first-time this was may of 1996. in the courthouse there is no judge. we have just taken place over. on our side of the bar where the judge and witnesses would normally beat, boston police officers, federal agents, prosecutors be personal federal prosecutors, parole officers, city of boston gained out reach, city of boston tried to calm this stuff down and get people off the streets. the other side of the bar
some people in law enforcement know it. people who follow the unintelligible academic literature on this know it be personal most people aren't and don't. this is a very nonacademic manifesto saying we know this at this time to start acting like it. the first big moment of this came in boston in 1996. i want to read from the book about that. so let me set the stage for you. one of the moments in this work has turned out to be sitting down with extremely hard-core offenders and talking to them...
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Sep 1, 2012
09/12
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they put him through high school and college and through law school on scholarships. the fact that that faith survived within the world were to, where he signed up today after graduating graduating from your law school to go fight in the war and that faith demanded hope. it demanded acts of hope come about during chicago working on the catholic interracial council to integrate schools and hospitals or whether it was the creation of the peace corps. services to the poor, job or can any of those programs and ultimately the acts of love. i know it sounds kind of corny, but he really i think believed that. i think that you see the commitment to love and its relationship with my mom at 56 years. but she also seen the fact the mets had the greatest sign of hope and love and faith for him was the fact that he chased my mouth or seven years before she agreed to marry him. that is a seven-year courtship before a 56 year marriage. but it was the combination of faith, hope and love and really has exhibited in his role as a father and grandfather. i'll just tell one story from th
they put him through high school and college and through law school on scholarships. the fact that that faith survived within the world were to, where he signed up today after graduating graduating from your law school to go fight in the war and that faith demanded hope. it demanded acts of hope come about during chicago working on the catholic interracial council to integrate schools and hospitals or whether it was the creation of the peace corps. services to the poor, job or can any of those...
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Dec 1, 2012
12/12
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the law is extremely protective of the free-speech rights of college students. extremely protective. obviously of free speech, period but on the campuses in particular the case is coming out of the 1970's. the supreme court was very clear that the universities cannot restrict even highly offensive speech on campus. this is very clearly established there's been over a dozen legal opinions and challenges to the campus speech codes over the past several decades and every one of them has been successful 65% of campuses the three injured 92 campuses that we surveyed in the most recent study maintained speech codes that are either unconstitutional and public colleges or private colleges violate that initial promise of freedom of speech. we've been able to a speech code of the month since 2005 on. we've done it every single months and we are in no danger of running out of the codes and that is outrageous given that the public colleges these are all unconstitutional not even a close call but i will give you an example of this. jackson state university and jacksonville a
the law is extremely protective of the free-speech rights of college students. extremely protective. obviously of free speech, period but on the campuses in particular the case is coming out of the 1970's. the supreme court was very clear that the universities cannot restrict even highly offensive speech on campus. this is very clearly established there's been over a dozen legal opinions and challenges to the campus speech codes over the past several decades and every one of them has been...
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Dec 29, 2012
12/12
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then we have peter jaszi, professor of copyright law at the washington college of law, american university, also an author. i will say also peter would not want me to, recently given the great honor by his colleagues at the washington college of law to have a lecture named after him. congratulations and thank you for joining us. [applause] so our topic is copyright and the book. very small topic. copyright and the book, authors, publishers and the public interest. i want to reflect on the title for a moment. copyright and the book is at its core a discussion about the public interest. with arthur's and publishers as part of the public interest. i would underscore that because in the more recent conversations, in political circles, it sometimes teed up as a conversation where publishers and authors are somehow and difficult to or at least in competition with the goals of the public and that is not the foundational history of copyright law in united states. we will talk about incentivizing authors, evaluating publishers, serving readers, protecting freedom of expression. we are also going to
then we have peter jaszi, professor of copyright law at the washington college of law, american university, also an author. i will say also peter would not want me to, recently given the great honor by his colleagues at the washington college of law to have a lecture named after him. congratulations and thank you for joining us. [applause] so our topic is copyright and the book. very small topic. copyright and the book, authors, publishers and the public interest. i want to reflect on the title...
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133
Jul 29, 2012
07/12
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laws. just a vote you have to show i h when they make your show i detested by simple medication frantic. >> i'm awill says astonished tht people like 35 years old up to show id to buy cigarettes or alcohol in some places. yet, we don't do it for voting which is so critical. it's bnot byarre. it makes me think that maybe something is happening behind the election camerve we don't kw about. they don't want that to stop because it and that is a political interest. it is bizarre that the same bureaucrats that impose data idealize and bsteding all these consumer products don't want that for the fundamental issue of voting. the s a valid interest of the state. thirsc states have some form of >> ii'rement. a% of the american people support this. it strikes me as bnot byarre. youh now, rhode island, a democratic state with a demofatic legisla% rre passed it the other side the law. the sponsor was the only. that african-american speaker. voter fraud in the district constituents were complaining abou
laws. just a vote you have to show i h when they make your show i detested by simple medication frantic. >> i'm awill says astonished tht people like 35 years old up to show id to buy cigarettes or alcohol in some places. yet, we don't do it for voting which is so critical. it's bnot byarre. it makes me think that maybe something is happening behind the election camerve we don't kw about. they don't want that to stop because it and that is a political interest. it is bizarre that the same...
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Jul 14, 2012
07/12
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without the natural law gu.ohow yake eto t creature of god. he is a person who is -- has the same rights as everybody else and you cannot make that fiction that you are the master and he is the slave and has no life. oktu ft cchurch rejected out but i recount in the book, work in the sixteenth century undermining slavery in latin america. the donican priest who stood agnst ery incding peopitn e ic er audorin that regard. this question of prudence which is one of the virtues i talk about. cardinal virtues. credential the speaking we coul't -you on g erert. lot citn of the united states, basically get rid of slavery. you eat aw at it and that is why it is easy to say everybody knew this wasrong about st ouitodyanhi cali church had a probable leading the way in the fight against slavery. we have been figing today about this other fiction that some consider a right which is ere right to kill the baby in voud. th cights issue. i object to people who say it is a matter of religion. it is biology 101. the color of my skin and color twoon aermothm dna
without the natural law gu.ohow yake eto t creature of god. he is a person who is -- has the same rights as everybody else and you cannot make that fiction that you are the master and he is the slave and has no life. oktu ft cchurch rejected out but i recount in the book, work in the sixteenth century undermining slavery in latin america. the donican priest who stood agnst ery incding peopitn e ic er audorin that regard. this question of prudence which is one of the virtues i talk about....
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Jul 30, 2012
07/12
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they're sitting on the law. you can go see them but somebody might walk up in three hours time and rent that car. if you've got it, they can't rent it out. so i think edison, edison missed the boat a little, but he also, and ford wouldn't rent, or wouldn't sell cars on the installment plan into this finally forced into by chevy in the mid 1920s. forward didn't want the farmer, typically the buyer, to get in over his head. now, it's also true probably in a heavy a great society where two-thirds of your publishing live on the farm, how do you repossess a car that the farmer stopped making payments on? where do you find the car? in a 1600-acre farm. oh, it's around, good luck. repo man just doesn't work as well. on the farm as it does in the city. but i think it was more the interest as opposed to just being located. i think was located close to new york city because the harbor facilities, the workforce, and he loved riding, there's evidence in the book, hey, if you're in new york come see me, we are only a few min
they're sitting on the law. you can go see them but somebody might walk up in three hours time and rent that car. if you've got it, they can't rent it out. so i think edison, edison missed the boat a little, but he also, and ford wouldn't rent, or wouldn't sell cars on the installment plan into this finally forced into by chevy in the mid 1920s. forward didn't want the farmer, typically the buyer, to get in over his head. now, it's also true probably in a heavy a great society where two-thirds...
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May 19, 2012
05/12
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because there is enhanced e-book links to media, links to audio, applications to law whole new kettle of fish. the whole new way of reading. but the definition of a book is not what it is going to be. and, you know, i would agree with you also, one of the things that publishers have to do in the industry is to try to keep pressing forward. >> ideally i like the printed page. less distraction. all the devices have these moments where you can duck out. that is one of the great things that having of his new book your hand. that rate will not run and you can turn the page when you want to. you guys are changing faster than we are. is up to us. even the libraries have make technological innovations. >> i just want to add one quick point from the advantage of a regional business. this is obviously true. people are increasingly with all sorts of things, but you should come by our store and go to our children's department and see the vast number of kids in their reading physical books looking for physical books, enjoying physical books, wanting -- reading a book is a sort of tactile experienc
because there is enhanced e-book links to media, links to audio, applications to law whole new kettle of fish. the whole new way of reading. but the definition of a book is not what it is going to be. and, you know, i would agree with you also, one of the things that publishers have to do in the industry is to try to keep pressing forward. >> ideally i like the printed page. less distraction. all the devices have these moments where you can duck out. that is one of the great things that...
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Jun 25, 2012
06/12
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eye 127
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if we get only the kinds of intelligence that lead to the best law firms in new york robust financial institutions in the country, these quick problem-solving types of intelligence, which are real, then we have dollar crosses at the best schools are the worst schools. doesn't matter. we really have to rethink what we do, how we define success in an admissions process. so what i'm saying is that there is a paradox and irony were at the top of the mountain with the best universities in the world and yet if things are so good, why do we feel so that? why do we feel we're in a state of crisis or near crisis? i think that calls for rethinking, but not disbanding of the great universities, for rethinking the way they are organized their values, structures and the way we actually built on as we shall come even physical spaces are different 30, 40 years from what they are today. now we have the chemistry building that says chemistry on the front or in engineering building. there will be no borders site that in the future. we are going to have universities about orders come within universities
if we get only the kinds of intelligence that lead to the best law firms in new york robust financial institutions in the country, these quick problem-solving types of intelligence, which are real, then we have dollar crosses at the best schools are the worst schools. doesn't matter. we really have to rethink what we do, how we define success in an admissions process. so what i'm saying is that there is a paradox and irony were at the top of the mountain with the best universities in the world...
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Mar 11, 2012
03/12
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at columbia law school in new york city. hughes, of course, was at the top of his class, made the highest grade ever recorded on the new york bar, and franklin actually flunked a couple of courses, never finished but did pass the bar, the new york bar. hughes then went on to be a brilliant lawyer in private practice but also made his name as an investigator of corruption and mismanagement in the, in the utilities and insurance fields. and he was a very cool, very tough investigator. one very indignant ceo of an insurance company when the question got very, very tough said to hughes, sir, we are missionaries serving the public interest. and hughes said that he was looking into what seemed to be exorbitant salaries. he said, yes, but the question still comes back to the salaries of the missionaries. [laughter] and he just kept boring in, and he made such a impression on everybody that it catapulted him into politics. he was elected governor of new york, republican, and reelected. franklin, on the other hand, never really cared
at columbia law school in new york city. hughes, of course, was at the top of his class, made the highest grade ever recorded on the new york bar, and franklin actually flunked a couple of courses, never finished but did pass the bar, the new york bar. hughes then went on to be a brilliant lawyer in private practice but also made his name as an investigator of corruption and mismanagement in the, in the utilities and insurance fields. and he was a very cool, very tough investigator. one very...
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Jun 17, 2012
06/12
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our church to give us the grounding of natural law. people say that it's kind of a antiquated notion, but they are wrong. everybody knows in her heart what is wrong. th what is really true is what the government decrees, some people say. the government tells us what is right is -- and what is wrong.is a you know that there is a higher law that you can answer to reedit and guess when we discovered this? some people say, if you take these ideas which are entertained in a broad sense by marx and freud and darwin, allt of these materialists, the idea that there is no such thing as truth and moral absolute, the only thing that exists is a law in which the government decrees come you can't prosecute people when it comes to the law telling you what to do. they were good, loyal soldiers. the only way we could prosecute these people is in regards to catholic teaching. they all said you had to know it your heart of hearts that these jewsod w were innocent human bes and you put them into ovens. i look at the situation, and i remember at carnegie
our church to give us the grounding of natural law. people say that it's kind of a antiquated notion, but they are wrong. everybody knows in her heart what is wrong. th what is really true is what the government decrees, some people say. the government tells us what is right is -- and what is wrong.is a you know that there is a higher law that you can answer to reedit and guess when we discovered this? some people say, if you take these ideas which are entertained in a broad sense by marx and...
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Dec 23, 2012
12/12
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>> guest: the laws restricted. you have to have an across-the-board deductible and a few.you can't have one. i don't like that. wash and be flexible enough to work flexible, most people wouldn't have a health savings account. >> host: you mentioned with regard to health care legislations that the supporters , the current health care bill will want to make changes. what are some of the changes you perceive in making quick >> guest: you have to give the opportunity for a plan that has dire deductible. you can control costs and the other way, they have to adjust to the plan they're going to die. the apothecary legislation has very strange subsidies. the employees of this hotel around $10, $50 an hour have to have a family plan that costs $15,000. that's half their wages. the new law gives no help to the employees are at the hotel to buy that plan. on the other hand if the hotel abolishes the insurance plan and since employees to an exchange, they're going to get 10, $15,000 in the federal government. you're going to s
>> guest: the laws restricted. you have to have an across-the-board deductible and a few.you can't have one. i don't like that. wash and be flexible enough to work flexible, most people wouldn't have a health savings account. >> host: you mentioned with regard to health care legislations that the supporters , the current health care bill will want to make changes. what are some of the changes you perceive in making quick >> guest: you have to give the opportunity for a plan...
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Nov 5, 2012
11/12
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that is our responsibility. >> host: what about the three laws of robotics? >> but it turns out for the robot to be smart enough and they have already taken over the world. [laughter] it is very hard. cognition, artificial intelligence, shoot a gun and is easy. that is not the way it will have been. if you have the robots to make ethical choices, we just need to watch to evolves regulatory and surveillance abilities to spot it early. >> host: go back to synthetic biology with questions to worry about hobbyist doing a killer virus? the doctor email laing dm day. and a just and just this? >> i did talk at length about this. dna synthesis is done by big companies. you can design your own sequence said it to the lab then you get back in a vital but they are pretty good at spotting bad stuff. you don't know how they work but we trust them to protect us from that. but what of those are on every desktop? then they say we ensure there is intelligence that when you're sequence comes said, it needs to pass the test and only then. right now by the photocopier impasse to
that is our responsibility. >> host: what about the three laws of robotics? >> but it turns out for the robot to be smart enough and they have already taken over the world. [laughter] it is very hard. cognition, artificial intelligence, shoot a gun and is easy. that is not the way it will have been. if you have the robots to make ethical choices, we just need to watch to evolves regulatory and surveillance abilities to spot it early. >> host: go back to synthetic biology with...
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Sep 4, 2012
09/12
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roosevelt certainly hadn't created the range law -- groups, roosevelt certainly hadn't created the law, that these amended with the demise of herself in a splayed out like a slap in the face or the commissioner. new yorkers drinking openly and take hotels and say clubs on sundays and also at three in the morning and were not only drinking. unmarried young women, shopgirl compactor grocer might never walk to a hotel were starting to walk or stagger up as convenient a room stairs in a hotel. roosevelt is delighted to scrivens overwork and in particular families on sundays was not amused by any of it and began secretly looking for a new job. tear would eventually alienate every newspaper including the reform papers and his own republican party. he was circuiting with fellow commissioners of fire was so police chief. you name it. it got ugly and exciting new battle rebuilt every tammany home. but ultimately i say it turned out very well for roosevelt. the job of police commissioner did as much for him as he did for the job and in this two years i watched the national stage. he honed his sp
roosevelt certainly hadn't created the range law -- groups, roosevelt certainly hadn't created the law, that these amended with the demise of herself in a splayed out like a slap in the face or the commissioner. new yorkers drinking openly and take hotels and say clubs on sundays and also at three in the morning and were not only drinking. unmarried young women, shopgirl compactor grocer might never walk to a hotel were starting to walk or stagger up as convenient a room stairs in a hotel....
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Apr 15, 2012
04/12
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they quickly moved to change the laws. the panthers responded by storming the hearing in sacramento. seeing the panthers storm the legislature. they have guns and leather coats. they are crazy. .. [laughter] >> because your kids you want to be with of the roughest and the toughest. >>> next to program from our archives. brad present research on the titanic disaster to better comprehend why the ship sunk so quickly. with the assistance of deep sea divers and shipwreck investigators jongh and richie kolevar contended that the titanic falls were born during the construction of the shift. a taxing 100 years ago on april april 15th, 1912. >> [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] ramallah [inaudible] blank saxby to. [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] [inaudible] and try to figure out what are we going to do. we are not the kind of guy is that correct. w
they quickly moved to change the laws. the panthers responded by storming the hearing in sacramento. seeing the panthers storm the legislature. they have guns and leather coats. they are crazy. .. [laughter] >> because your kids you want to be with of the roughest and the toughest. >>> next to program from our archives. brad present research on the titanic disaster to better comprehend why the ship sunk so quickly. with the assistance of deep sea divers and shipwreck...
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Aug 18, 2012
08/12
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we break the state laws. but, you know, people don't violate social laws have often. very often. so when was the last time you saw a man wearing a pink skirt? [laughter] unacceptable. and what would happen if he did that? that's a social law, and you just can't violate them. i have a chapter in here about changing a very important social law which was the female genital cutting in senegal which in ten years they completely -- almost, i mean, it's never completely eradicated -- it's almost completely eradicated because they couldn't do it for thousands of years because it was such a powerful social law. nobody would even talk b to a girl, much less marry a young woman had she not been what they called cut. but through a social action campaign with mass media, they got people to understand the custom, what was going on with the custom, but also what the cost of it was. people's health, people's well being and democratic choice. so now with new media, with the internet how is this changing? for good and for bad. for good -- and for bad -- is the gatekeeping effect. so for many, many
we break the state laws. but, you know, people don't violate social laws have often. very often. so when was the last time you saw a man wearing a pink skirt? [laughter] unacceptable. and what would happen if he did that? that's a social law, and you just can't violate them. i have a chapter in here about changing a very important social law which was the female genital cutting in senegal which in ten years they completely -- almost, i mean, it's never completely eradicated -- it's almost...
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Aug 19, 2012
08/12
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law and go on to become president of the united states. but during the same period of time in which it adopted the social model, we have seen radically accelerating inequality and more importantly unless covered, declining social mobility. no social mobility proves to be incredibly tricky to measure and there's debate about which you are measuring them what they are measuring mobility over the course of a lifetime for two generationally. but if you look at the literature, which you see as the strong suggestion that it is getting harder to start at the bottom and work your way to the top, that the odds of starting your way from the bottom to top card that is easier to did at 20, 30, 40 years ago than now which is to save failing to deliver on essential and foundational problems. it is like giving a good thing that it is supposed to give us. and why is that? selling the book i talk about my own high school and i should take a moment today it's always funny to watch people against the elites when you think for one of them. prior to the herita
law and go on to become president of the united states. but during the same period of time in which it adopted the social model, we have seen radically accelerating inequality and more importantly unless covered, declining social mobility. no social mobility proves to be incredibly tricky to measure and there's debate about which you are measuring them what they are measuring mobility over the course of a lifetime for two generationally. but if you look at the literature, which you see as the...
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164
Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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eye 164
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my law firm brought the case gebs the -- against the university of michigan and law school. we brought that original case ten years ago, won against the law school, lost against undergrads because of sandra day o'connor who says we need 25 more years of affirmative action. now we have constitutional provisions with expiration dates. [laughter] there's -- there's -- an interesting book called "mismatched" by two liberals making the argument with empirical evidence that affirmative action is harmful to black people. what a surprise. liberals try to help, ruin black people's lives. that's the story of the book. their argument is by if it's a little bit of affirmative action, not bad, but elevating people to schools they are not ready for and where everyone else has higher scores, they get discouraged, depressed, feel stupid, drop out, easy subjects. one way liberals brushed the sad results of affirmative action under the rug is all the black studies courses which just pushes them off into a ghetto. how do they cover the failure of the public schools? affirmative action. i have
my law firm brought the case gebs the -- against the university of michigan and law school. we brought that original case ten years ago, won against the law school, lost against undergrads because of sandra day o'connor who says we need 25 more years of affirmative action. now we have constitutional provisions with expiration dates. [laughter] there's -- there's -- an interesting book called "mismatched" by two liberals making the argument with empirical evidence that affirmative...
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Sep 16, 2012
09/12
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towerful than state laws. so, you know, how we sped to get here? if we break the state laws, but, you know, people don't violate social laws very often. so whf the last time you saw a man wearing a pink skirt? unacceptable. what would happen if he did that? that's a social law. and you can't violate them. i have a chapter in here about scheduling of very important social law which was the female gent genital cutting. in ten years say that completely almost, it's never completely eradicatedded. it's almost completely eradicated. they don't it because it was a powerful social law. nobody would talk to a girl much less marry a young woman had she had the been what they called cut. but through a social action campaign with mass media, they got people to unthe custom, chaffs going on with the custom but also what the cost of it was. people's health, people's well being and democratic choice. so now with new media, with the internet, how is it changing? for good and bad. for good and for bad is a gate keeping effect
towerful than state laws. so, you know, how we sped to get here? if we break the state laws, but, you know, people don't violate social laws very often. so whf the last time you saw a man wearing a pink skirt? unacceptable. what would happen if he did that? that's a social law. and you can't violate them. i have a chapter in here about scheduling of very important social law which was the female gent genital cutting. in ten years say that completely almost, it's never completely eradicatedded....
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157
Aug 4, 2012
08/12
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[applause] washington is making well laws. of the ama supported the health care reform law due to the opposition of physicians. that now continues. looking at the patient's perspective with the battle over health care look at price bubbles. drugs that go on the market and then go off. too big to fail makes it very difficult to change. may not so sure it was built around that. it is not good for doctors or patients. >> can you address the issue the dartmouth atlas said 50% of health care costs comes in the last two years of life. new jersey leads the way. can you comment on care at the end of life? >> there was an attempt to put it in a provision to allow medicare to have a conversation of a life limiting illness. now we have the term death panels that took the provision out. the intention was to recognize impatiens are seriously ill, seven minutes is not enough time the intent to was to create a space and time of what people's choices are. but for political reasons was taken out. at the foundation into the mainstream health ca
[applause] washington is making well laws. of the ama supported the health care reform law due to the opposition of physicians. that now continues. looking at the patient's perspective with the battle over health care look at price bubbles. drugs that go on the market and then go off. too big to fail makes it very difficult to change. may not so sure it was built around that. it is not good for doctors or patients. >> can you address the issue the dartmouth atlas said 50% of health care...
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98
Jan 29, 2012
01/12
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is there an argument that we need stronger laws? >> guest: we need stronger laws but also civil-rights are doing not enough and too much at the same time. again with the subtle forms of bias the system reforms we need more but they may not take the form and probably wouldn't those of our conventionally understood but on the other hand,, when the law is applied indiscriminately comment then sometimes it is too much and in many cases as my book is designed to illustrate we do need to say that prohibits ladies' night. it is both it is the end type of problem which is a vexing thinkpad about the contemporary moment. >> host: this is a curveball comment on the henry s. storey. is that a civil-rights issue? >> that is a curve ball i don't know if you had a chance to think about that. >> guest: i am aware of the controversy. her resonates because in so many instances, historical a african-americans have been exploited to have their contributions fake and without getting it acknowledgement or credits of there is a sense it is the epitome of
is there an argument that we need stronger laws? >> guest: we need stronger laws but also civil-rights are doing not enough and too much at the same time. again with the subtle forms of bias the system reforms we need more but they may not take the form and probably wouldn't those of our conventionally understood but on the other hand,, when the law is applied indiscriminately comment then sometimes it is too much and in many cases as my book is designed to illustrate we do need to say...
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Jun 25, 2012
06/12
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that's not a texas law. all rick had done was follow the money the business community wanted the program. he didn't know it was bipartisan. he didn't know he was doing anything interested when he supported it. there was a sense of texas is more sane when it comes to hispanic integration than many parts at least border part of the country. but when it's not done is integrate two things. not integrated the hispanic residences into the political and business power structure in the way you would expect by now. and two, it's not doing the job of educating young hispanic children that it needs to do if they are going to become critical skills workers for the next generation. right now texas imports college graduates. it imports as many as it creates on the own. when you are paying to help make the universities in illinois top tier universities you are paying to help staff businesses in texas. a lot of your graduates are going to wind up down there. unless texas and tees up and steps up to the education plate. in t
that's not a texas law. all rick had done was follow the money the business community wanted the program. he didn't know it was bipartisan. he didn't know he was doing anything interested when he supported it. there was a sense of texas is more sane when it comes to hispanic integration than many parts at least border part of the country. but when it's not done is integrate two things. not integrated the hispanic residences into the political and business power structure in the way you would...
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Jan 28, 2012
01/12
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rights laws. the laws against sex discrimination, extremely important making sure women have access to the workplace and that women have access on an equal footing to public accommodations . like restaurants and bars and what have you. no, these laws have been used in order to overturn ladies night at local bars and restaurants. california is one. ladies night is not a violation of civil-rights laws. it's also true in many other american states. one person even sued to overturn a mother's day promotion on the basis that it was sex discrimination. he did not win that suit, but my point is that this was a possible lawsuit tell lot of people because we have taken an extreme view of the prohibition against said discrimination. rather than looking at it according to its original purposes, according to a sensible public policy purpose, which is making sure that women have equal access to the market and equal access to public institutions, we have taken a kind of abstract you that would also sweet ladies
rights laws. the laws against sex discrimination, extremely important making sure women have access to the workplace and that women have access on an equal footing to public accommodations . like restaurants and bars and what have you. no, these laws have been used in order to overturn ladies night at local bars and restaurants. california is one. ladies night is not a violation of civil-rights laws. it's also true in many other american states. one person even sued to overturn a mother's day...
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Feb 26, 2012
02/12
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other failed to prevent the union busting law from passing those protests protesters to radicalize the mate -- that labor movement nationwide and made labor unions quick to recognize the potential benefits of aligning with occupy wall street. this is a dream come true for us, to have decent people speaking out about what is happening to working people. said george gresham president of local 99 a union of 300,000 health care workers. trade unionists were active in occupy wall street from the outset taking part in the first general assembly on august 2 and forming the ows labor working group within the first week of the occupation at zucotti. the group which would come to have more than 100 members representing more than 40 unions adopted a dual purpose, supporting union struggles, seeking union support for the occupy movement. by the october 5 rally the group had conceded in securing the endorsement of the executive council of the afl-cio the largest federation of unions in the united states. i was surprised with the eagerness of the unions responded. a founder of the labor working grou
other failed to prevent the union busting law from passing those protests protesters to radicalize the mate -- that labor movement nationwide and made labor unions quick to recognize the potential benefits of aligning with occupy wall street. this is a dream come true for us, to have decent people speaking out about what is happening to working people. said george gresham president of local 99 a union of 300,000 health care workers. trade unionists were active in occupy wall street from the...
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Sep 8, 2012
09/12
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the law changed everything. it was copied all over the world. david moss, who studied these carefully, what i think it did is it created a sense of pleasure in investing. it made -- people used to invest in lotteries. they loved to gamble. that's another human trait, lovable of loving the excitement if your number came out. creating limited liability, it was fun, the same way a lottery is fun. i mean, people have to enjoy life; right? there has to be something that makes you get out of bed in the morning and gives you excitement. we design things that give you that feeling. that securities law has been the source of a lot of our innovations because now investors -- looks like they play a game, looks a little selfish, but that drives our economy. carl marx said it was gambling, and we should shut it down, worse than that, worse than that, but after years of experimenting with that people think, well, maybe we have to let people indulge in these feelings, and so they -- okay -- so let me move. i have another -- another 10-15 minutes. i wanted to t
the law changed everything. it was copied all over the world. david moss, who studied these carefully, what i think it did is it created a sense of pleasure in investing. it made -- people used to invest in lotteries. they loved to gamble. that's another human trait, lovable of loving the excitement if your number came out. creating limited liability, it was fun, the same way a lottery is fun. i mean, people have to enjoy life; right? there has to be something that makes you get out of bed in...
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102
Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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. >> do you think it's time for laws of robotics? >> the three laws of robotics are the rules that stop robots from killing. everybody brings this up, and for a robot to be smart enough to apply the three laws, they've already taken over the world; right? [laughter] that's really hard. that's artificial intelligence. turns out it's, like, just shooting guns, that's easy. robots are good at that stuff, but bad at reassuring people. that's not the way it's going to happen. we can't have -- we can't have robots with the intelligence to make ethical choices. we need to search society and cull qhur, what's what's going on, and evolve our regulatory and surveillance activity to stop it early. >> back to the technology, and there's questions about hobbyists, and you talked about the doctor e-mailing you, the dna for your vaccine. what if it was a spoof e-mail. e-mail is easy to spoof. ingest this, give it to your kids. worry about that? >> i talked to craig at length about this. right now, dna sint thinks is done by big companies. you can d
. >> do you think it's time for laws of robotics? >> the three laws of robotics are the rules that stop robots from killing. everybody brings this up, and for a robot to be smart enough to apply the three laws, they've already taken over the world; right? [laughter] that's really hard. that's artificial intelligence. turns out it's, like, just shooting guns, that's easy. robots are good at that stuff, but bad at reassuring people. that's not the way it's going to happen. we can't...
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Nov 19, 2012
11/12
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[laughter] bernie madoff and those cleanly by intellect of supernatural laws. white in the world? one must question the portion of the human being who said the seas will begin to rise. but to emerge from power the mass confusion of the group. with those outmoded forms of religion and culture may also be seen for those who seek out magic. with that pass live stir and the political strongman but the magic feather and the magic beans and the stimulus cannot be attempted without sacrifice. the contemporary equivalent it implies a supernatural recipient and requires the perhaps demigod to teach us the acceptable form. evade the question to why the failed politician the dictator, of lynn glammed should be supported with the words are meeting less in the word is proving worthless but this is the point* perhaps with the psychic healer for the experience itself which is a real transitory. promising new treatment will work it will take more money wartime and the victim of the demagogue is also schooled that the magic needs time to work with and to suggest otherwise is ill logical. just like
[laughter] bernie madoff and those cleanly by intellect of supernatural laws. white in the world? one must question the portion of the human being who said the seas will begin to rise. but to emerge from power the mass confusion of the group. with those outmoded forms of religion and culture may also be seen for those who seek out magic. with that pass live stir and the political strongman but the magic feather and the magic beans and the stimulus cannot be attempted without sacrifice. the...
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Oct 28, 2012
10/12
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my law firm. the case against the university of michigan undergrad and law school my alma mater. it was the center for individual rights and we brought that a kitchen -- original case 10 years ago and we lost against the undergrads because of sandra day o'connor who said we need 25 more years of affirmative action so now we have constitutional -- with expiration dates. there is an interesting book called mismatch by two liberals making the argument with empirical evidence that affirmative action has been harmful to black people. what a surprise. liberals try to help ruin black people's lives. that is the story in my book and their argument is if it's a little bit of affirmative action not so bad that when you're elevating people to schools that they are not ready for and where everyone else has higher scores, they get discouraged and depressed and they drop out and take easy subjects. one-way liberals have brushed the sad result of affirmative action under the rug is by all these black study courses which have pushed them off into this and how did do they cover the failure of the
my law firm. the case against the university of michigan undergrad and law school my alma mater. it was the center for individual rights and we brought that a kitchen -- original case 10 years ago and we lost against the undergrads because of sandra day o'connor who said we need 25 more years of affirmative action so now we have constitutional -- with expiration dates. there is an interesting book called mismatch by two liberals making the argument with empirical evidence that affirmative...
471
471
Dec 10, 2012
12/12
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vigorously opposed to a number page especially the prominent lawyers and judges who would not trigger to the law and order side. many heated arguments almost to the point that arose in the barber's chair. local author polly jacobson wrote, when i first set foot in san francisco in february 1850, sawyer continued in the clouds of steam, i wanted to be an engineer and a steamer pier twain grunted disapproval. but if i try performing the honest business of fighting fire in training the gang of right tied adolescent boys to lead the engines with their torches. the city desperately needs volunteers and needed runners like a then in new york city and new york. sawyers 90 life-saving acts urge had taken place on board a burning steamboat of which twain had a particular horror. the kind of dread that awakened the journalist that may and saddam shaking in clouds of cigar smoke. for that reason, you listen attentively, switzerland on this route. fire and explosion on board the steamboat independence. in which hundreds died from hideous goals. a steamer in new york city and christmas day 1850 he did not re
vigorously opposed to a number page especially the prominent lawyers and judges who would not trigger to the law and order side. many heated arguments almost to the point that arose in the barber's chair. local author polly jacobson wrote, when i first set foot in san francisco in february 1850, sawyer continued in the clouds of steam, i wanted to be an engineer and a steamer pier twain grunted disapproval. but if i try performing the honest business of fighting fire in training the gang of...
121
121
Apr 23, 2012
04/12
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in private property and vote for so start for a second what the rule of law. if you want to make an account and take a definition that you yourself did not invent for the occasion. the best of these definitions is written by a man who never used the phrase, perhaps the greatest of american legal think there's in retrospect, a man named attribute made major jurisprudence contracts also for defines it as a series of procedural virtues, which i kinds of things everyone regardless of political persuasion will accept. these are no bias and termination and charges given against you and impartial judges to individuals who administers the particular charges and try and find although you'll find these are useless impediments to the social justice as basic operated by machetes and worse. if the useless template. it's a riot good as most were not the basic structure and system of entitlements as we have it, but rather to how it is that she make the grade administrators today were. and four was not trained to rail against the new deal tradition or progressive tradition, n
in private property and vote for so start for a second what the rule of law. if you want to make an account and take a definition that you yourself did not invent for the occasion. the best of these definitions is written by a man who never used the phrase, perhaps the greatest of american legal think there's in retrospect, a man named attribute made major jurisprudence contracts also for defines it as a series of procedural virtues, which i kinds of things everyone regardless of political...
172
172
Feb 6, 2012
02/12
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we don't need more law. we don't need marcotte. we need to take what we thought, refocus it in these proved ways and just stop it. [applause] so i think the way we are going to do this is to speak into the microphone. some would like to do that? >> said there was the boston miracle for the boston hard work, but since then there has been a rise of crime again. there is a recent article in "the boston globe" about the exciting that was happening to train actors and how they were trying to work it out. and you hear a lot of reason for why despite it happening again and i would like to hear what your take on it is, what is the truth of it and what is going to happen as we move forward? >> so there has been ungodly volume spent on what happened often. nearly all the which partakes in a consensual fiction, which is a fancy word for a lie. so here's what really happened in austin. they stop going to work. it is just that in bold. everything else that's been talked about. conflating among the ministers, shift in focus to homeland security,
we don't need more law. we don't need marcotte. we need to take what we thought, refocus it in these proved ways and just stop it. [applause] so i think the way we are going to do this is to speak into the microphone. some would like to do that? >> said there was the boston miracle for the boston hard work, but since then there has been a rise of crime again. there is a recent article in "the boston globe" about the exciting that was happening to train actors and how they were...
91
91
Dec 17, 2012
12/12
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did i want to go to seminary or to law school? for family reasons, my husband wanted to relocate to connecticut. i wound up in law school rather than in seminary and was delighted when i discovered i could do a joint degree with the divinity school at yale, and thought i had been trading off one interest against the other and discovered, thanks to the availability of interdisciplinary training, that i could actually combine my interests so i started in around 1982. i'm in my 30th year of working in this field and i find myself still fascinated, still intrigued, and dedicated to thinking deeply about the relationship between law and religion. >> host: where was the picture from on the cover of "the spirit of the law"? >> guest: oh, this is outside the united states supreme court, and it was taken on the day that a challenge to the pledge of allegiance, not the requirement that students say it, but the insertion of the words "under god" into the pledge of allege, which happened actually in the 1950s in part of the cold war pushback
did i want to go to seminary or to law school? for family reasons, my husband wanted to relocate to connecticut. i wound up in law school rather than in seminary and was delighted when i discovered i could do a joint degree with the divinity school at yale, and thought i had been trading off one interest against the other and discovered, thanks to the availability of interdisciplinary training, that i could actually combine my interests so i started in around 1982. i'm in my 30th year of...
146
146
Aug 31, 2012
08/12
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but under the law, they received all the cash they had given madoff and in many cases even more. they received money for madoff stole from other people in the years to their withdraws which they thought were legitimate earnings on their investment. there's no way to make this whole. if you rob peter to pay paul, how do you undo that? you take it back from palm to give it to peter. paul isn't going to be happy about that. he is going to believe that was his money and i am sympathetic to that. but peter is going to say no, it wasn't your money. it was mine. so that's the kind of legal heartbreak that is stretching out now for years into the future as this tangle, this knot is unwound. you can see why did a little upset with made transept when he claims money can fit all this. no way. >> we have about one minute left here palmar question. >> with respect to mrs. madoff. it's called traditional
but under the law, they received all the cash they had given madoff and in many cases even more. they received money for madoff stole from other people in the years to their withdraws which they thought were legitimate earnings on their investment. there's no way to make this whole. if you rob peter to pay paul, how do you undo that? you take it back from palm to give it to peter. paul isn't going to be happy about that. he is going to believe that was his money and i am sympathetic to that....